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Essay on theme of Italo Calvino's book "Invisible Cities" applied to work of some contemporaty artists as well as to work of Edita Pecotic, artist from Korcula:
Trying to find the right framework around which to build my essay for the module ‘Themes and Concepts 2’of my Fine art Degree, I visited the recent exhibition ‘ The State of Play’ at the Serpentine Gallery, London.
The exhibited art works reminded me of various details from Italo Calvino’s “Invisible Cities”. I decided to build upon some of the themes from the exhibition and Calvino’s book in my essay, and to apply its ideas to the work of various contemporary artists in whose work I am interested, as well as to some of my own work and the issues I am trying to address.
Italo Calvino’s ‘Invisible Cities’ is a collection of surreal short stories about cities visited by the traveller Marco Polo, places where people act, depict and consider things that make no sense or are impossible. It is written as of a succession of dialogues - meditative conversations between Kublai Khan, the emperor and Marco Polo, the traveller and visitor to Khan’s Empire. Marco Polo is describing to Kublai Khan various fantastic cities he saw on his travels in order for the Emperor to comprehend the sheer size of his own empire (home).
The issues covered in this collection of stories are visitor versus inhabitant, home vs. non-home, outsider vs. insider, foreign languages vs. mother tongue. All these topics are about issues I am interested in and are addressed in my work too.
I have specifically chosen a few of these stories to refer to for the purpose of this essay.
CITIES AND SIGNS:
One of Calvino’s short stories is about the city of Tamara – a city which streets are full of signboards jutting from the walls.
Calvino writes: “…Your gaze scans the streets as if they were written pages: the city says everything you must think, makes you repeat her discourse, and while you believe you are visiting Tamara you are only recording the names with which she defines herself and all her parts”
This refers to the semiotics of urban landscape, a panoramic view of a city surveyed by the viewer and symbolic representation of materials and social practices - opposition between the market and place. The signs are communicating to the viewer in well-premeditated language and form and in its
communication, signs are influencing and (re) forming viewer’s opinions.
Pipilotti
Rist ‘s videos and installations often
features billboards and consumer symbols. Her installation
at ‘The State of Play’ exhibition ‘Apple
Tree Innocent on Diamond Hill (2003)’ deals
with the issue of consumerism. To create this installation
she used a combination of video shots of an open ocean
and various plastic and paper see-through objects that
hangs from an apple tree branch, swinging in front of
video-projector so it projects its shadows over the ocean
shot. A shadow resembles fish passing in shallow water,
or driftwood surfing the surface of the ocean, so it looks
surreal and dramatic.
This is a vision of Rist’s world of wrappings of
various disposable objects one buys daily – white
or translucent plastic bags, shovels, toothbrushes and
its shadows mixed with wild nature of powerful ocean’s
waves.
My
photographs of billboards with cutout commercial messages
are about the same issue – the issue of consumerism
within contemporary cities that results in alienation
of the consumer as well as the producer who becomes also
a consumer on the other ‘end’ of the circle.
The boards are left empty and open so one can have a look
to see what is behind. Large empty hole left in billboards
represent new windows that perhaps could open a previously
unknown view.
In
my other work, a short film ‘Desperately Fighting
Scary Black Horses’ the same issue of consumerism
is addressed. A video-shot of a moving billboard is edited
in the way to appear that the little house from the billboard
(as symbol of the individual) is trying to push back powerful
horses – (logo of Lloyds Bank). The repetitive movement
of little house, the endless stream of passing traffic
and lullaby background music adds to atmosphere of everlasting
and tedious daily struggles.
CITIES
AND MEMORY:
Italo
Clavino writes about a city called ZORA, a city that no
one, having seen it, can ever forget:
“
… the city which can not be expunged from the mind
is like an armature, a honey-comb in whose cells each
of us can place the things he wants to remember…”
This
paragraph describes the power of memory and inevitably
with it nostalgia for lost and vanished places and events.
It raises issue of nostalgia that is addressed in melancholic
and romantic works of Mariele Neudecker.
A Mariele Neudecker video installation carries melancholic
nostalgias as well as alienating effects.
My
short film ‘Sunset at Willesden Junction’
is also about longing and recollection of romantic places
one cannot forget. This work raises issues of alienation
of the individual in urban environment as well as feelings
of displacement of outsider within new, non-home environment.
Another
artist whose work is relevant to these issues is Tacita
Dean. Her film ‘Disappearance at Sea’ is visual meditation on seemingly polarised opposites
– lighthouse and sea: man-made structure and nature,
as well as position of the individual (viewer) in that
setting.
CITIES
and DESIRE:
Another
Calvino’s short story is about city of Fedora, in
which city centre is the metal building with a crystal
globe in every room, so everybody can have a look in the
globe and can see different (desired) Fedora.
This reminds me of work of Sarah Sze called ‘Second Means of Egress (Orange)’ from
‘State of Play’ exhibition. This work is inspired
by fire escapes staircases usually found on the back facades
of toll city buildings.
Miniature staircases created by Sze, although too small
to climb on, invokes in the viewer the desire of climbing
this networked maze of false starts and dead-ends, ladders
and steps, balconies and platforms to experience the feeling
of danger of being lost (thus orange colour) in our own
desire.
Calvino
writes that it is ‘…the fun of sliding
down the spiral, twisting minaret (which never find a
pedestal from which to rise)’
In
this story about Fedora, Marco Polo tells Khan that in
his large Empire there must be a place for both Fedoras
- big and small ones, as they are both real cities as
well as assumptions, as a big one represents what is accepted
as necessary and a small one what is imagined as possible.
Reference
to this is in my animation work and the use of small Lego
figures. These animations are about desire (Beauty
Contest) and loneliness (Home Alone). Both
of it is result of alienation and irony of modern city
life where individual is isolated and lost in its environment
and is open to consumer’s exploitation.
THIN
CITIES:
This
is a story of city of Armilla, an unfinished or demolished
city – we don’t know, but city which has no
walls, no ceilings, and no floors – just water pipes
that rises vertically where the houses should be. As Calvino
deliberately puts – ‘you would think the
plumbers had finished their job and are gone away before
the bricklayers arrived’.
City without walls is an open city, a city that, perhaps,
welcomes visitors. This is a reminder of another piece
of work from the above-mentioned exhibition – ‘
The State of Play” – an installation work
by Andreas Slominski called ‘ Wall
Built from Top to Bottom’.
As
most of his work, this work is done in ‘impossible’
and bizarre manner by turning simple idea into absurd
solutions - he built a brick wall against rules of gravity
– from top to bottom.
This work refers to all great walls from human history
– The Great Wall of China or Berlin Wall, as well
as ‘ invisible’ walls – administrative
borders, passports and visas, which are modern kind of
walls that keep outsiders – outside.
Throughout
my work I have references to visible and invisible walls/
fences as symbols of divisions as well as, somehow, integrations
too.
The Book Art project that I did is a book of photographs
of wired fences and it’s shadows on a sunny Sunday
morning. This refers to issues of division between visitors
and inhabitants as well as outsiders and insider where
visible and invisible barriers are erected to keep undesired
out.
Another of my works addressing this issue is painting ‘ Frighten Stations Gathered Together for Mutual
Support’ where London train stations - points
of (new) arrivals, become metaphoric points of unease
and fear.
The
central insight of the book ‘Invisible Cities’,
as well as of most of my work is in the Marco Polo’s
sentence:
“Every
time I describe a city I am saying something about Venice”
Venice,
Marco’s home is the ‘first city that remains
implicit’ in everything else: it is the ‘invisible
city’ of the book’s title, multiplied as a
cycle of seemingly unrelated short stories, which are
fundamentally suggestions of the Original.
This
applies to my work too, as it is also about cities that
are all connected to my own hometown - Korcula and my adoptive hometown – London.
The
idea that is left ot hang above is summarised in this
Calvino’s sentence:
“True,
also in Hypatia the day will come when my only desire
will be to leave. I know I must not go down to the harbour
then, but climb the citadel’s highest pinnacle and
wait for a ship to go by up there. But will it ever go
by?”
(Edita
Pecotic, 2004) + read also by Edita
Pecotic - Non Places of Travel - essay |